Commentary on Romans

(Jacob Rumans) #1

23.There is indeed no difference,etc. He urges on all, without exception, the necessity of
seeking righteousness in Christ; as though he had said, “There is no other way of attaining
righteousness; for some cannot be justified in this and others in that way; but all must alike be
justified by faith, because all are sinners, and therefore have nothing for which they can glory before
God.” But he takes as granted that every one, conscious of his sin, when he comes before the tribunal
of God, is confounded and lost under a sense of his own shame; so that no sinner can bear the
presence of God, as we see an example in the case of Adam. He again brings forward a reason
taken from the opposite side; and hence we must notice what follows. Since we are all sinners, Paul
concludes, that we are deficient in, or destitute of, the praise due to righteousness. There is then,
according to what he teaches, no righteousness but what is perfect and absolute. Were there indeed
such a thing as half righteousness, it would yet be necessary to deprive the sinner entirely of all
glory: and hereby the figment of partial righteousness, as they call it, is sufficiently confuted; for
if it were true that we are justified in part by works, and in part by grace, this argument of Paul
would be of no force — that all are deprived of the glory of God because they are sinners. It is then
certain, there is no righteousness where there is sin, until Christ removes the curse; and this very
thing is what is said in Galatians 3:10, that all who are under the law are exposed to the curse, and
that we are delivered from it through the kindness of Christ. The glory of God I take to mean the
approbation of God, as in John 12:43, where it is said, that “they loved the glory of men more than
the glory of God.” And thus he summons us from the applause of a human court to the tribunal of
heaven.^118
24.Being justified freely,etc. A participle is here put for a verb according to the usage of the
Greek language. The meaning is, — that since there remains nothing for men, as to themselves,
but to perish, being smitten by the just judgment of God, they are to be justified freely through his
mercy; for Christ comes to the aid of this misery, and communicates himself to believers, so that
they find in him alone all those things in which they are wanting. There is, perhaps, no passage in
the whole Scripture which illustrates in a more striking manner the efficacy of his righteousness;
for it shows that God’s mercy is the efficient cause, that Christ with his blood is the meritorious
cause, that the formal or the instumental cause is faith in the word, and that moreover, the final
cause is the glory of the divine justice and goodness.
With regard to the efficient cause, he says, that we are justified freely, and further, by his grace;
and he thus repeats the word to show that the whole is from God, and nothing from us. It might
have been enough to oppose grace to merits; but lest we should imagine a half kind of grace, he
affirms more strongly what he means by a repetition, and claims for God’s mercy alone the whole
glory of our righteousness, which the sophists divide into parts and mutilate, that they may not be
constrained to confess their own poverty. — Through the redemption,etc. This is the material, —
Christ by his obedience satisfied the Father’s justice, (judicium — judgment,) and by undertaking
our cause he liberated us from the tyranny of death, by which we were held captive; as on account


(^118) Beza gives another view, that the verb , refers to those who run a race, and reach not the goal, and lose the prize.
The “glory of God” is the happiness which he bestows; (see Romans 5:2;) of this all mankind come short, however much some
seemed to labor for it; and it can only be attained by faith. Pareus, Locke, and Whitby give the same view. Others consider it to
be “the glory” due to God, — that all come short of rendering him the service and honor which he justly demands and requires.
So Doddridge, Scott, and Chalmers But Melancthon, Grotius and Macknight seemed to have agreed with Calvin in regarding
“glory” here as the praise or approbation that comes from God. The second view seems the most appropriate, according to what
is said in Romans 1:21, “they glorified him not as God.” — Ed.

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